Directory

Get involved with cultural resources in your community by exploring our collection of organizations, groups, and local artists.

Americas

Sea Mar Fiestas Patrias, presented by Sea Mar Community Health Centers, is a celebration of Latino culture, with two festivals hosted in the small, but lively neighborhood of South Park and Seattle Center, home of the Space Needle.
The Sea Mar Museum of Chicano/a/Latino/a Culture, celebrates the rich history of Chicano/as and Latino/as in Washington state.
We are a for-profit Alaska Native Corporation owned by more than 24,000 Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian shareholders. We draw inspiration from our shared heritage to protect our community’s greatest and most important resources – the oceans, forests, and people of Southeast Alaska. We hope these stories of our people, communities, and partners working together with purpose and pride will inspire others to join us.
The mission is to maintain the tradition of our Capoeira Angola to cultivate generations of students, capoeira artist instructors, and future masters who will pass on the legacy. Our programs are dedicated to the cultivation and preservation of Grand Mestre Nô’s Capoeira Angola lineage in the State of Washington. Through a combination of traditional and modern movement pedagogies, we aim to motivate our vibrant and unique community of diverse, mindful, and supportive practitioners.
Somos un grupo de entusiastas emprendedores de origen hispano, que desde 2005 ha producido en la zona de Puget Sound conciertos latinos, eventos culturales y artísticos, así como festivales latinos de muy alta calidad. We are a group of enthusiastic entrepreneurs of Hispanic origin, who since 2005 have produced high-quality Latin concerts, cultural and artistic events, and festival in the Puget Sound area.
The Chinatown-International District Business Improvement Area (CIDBIA) is a 501(c)3 non-profit tasked to improve the economic vitality of Seattle’s historic Chinatown-International District. CIDBIA focuses on sanitation services, public safety coordination, marketing and events, and advocacy for small businesses to create a clean, safe, and welcoming neighborhood.
In 2004, Martha Gonzalez and Quetzal Flores organized the first fandango workshop and in the following years, continued to perform and give workshops in the city. In 2008, Quetzal and Martha relocated to Seattle and connected with the few fandangueras/os in the city. Through small informal gatherings, this group shared their experience and knowledge of the fandango tradition and explored ideas to get more people involved. With a supportive community of artists, activist, and educators, the Seattle Fandango Project (SFP) coalesced in the summer of 2009 with the purpose of building a fandango community in Seattle and connect it to the larger movement in other parts of the United States and in Mexico. The Fandango traditions of Veracruz, Mexico, use music, singing, and dancing to generate a spirit of convivencia—of living and being in community. For a decade, musicians in Veracruz and in California have built a movement of convivencia through Fandango Sin Fronteras (Fandango Without Borders). The Seattle Fandango Project brings this movement to Seattle through workshops, concerts, and public discussions with guest artists. Come experience, and learn!
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